Quartz Stone & Sintered Stone
Quartz Stone & Sintered Stone

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Quartz Stone & Sintered Stone

Quartz Stone and Sintered Stone: What Homeowners Should Know About the Common Options in Malaysia

When homeowners compare kitchen countertops in Malaysia, two material names come up very often:

quartz stone and sintered stone.

In many cases, the slabs available in the market are imported from China, especially in the more mainstream and price-sensitive categories. That does not automatically make them bad. But it does mean homeowners should understand that these are broad product categories, not one single standard. Quality, density, finishing, consistency, backing, pattern realism, and technical performance can vary significantly from one factory or brand to another. Industry references on engineered quartz and sintered/porcelain slab manufacturing consistently show that these are global product categories with wide manufacturer variation rather than one uniform benchmark.



What is quartz stone?

“Quartz stone” in the kitchen market usually refers to engineered quartz surfaces. These are generally made by combining crushed quartz or other mineral fillers with resin binders and pigments, then compacting and curing the slab. For homeowners, quartz stone is usually popular because it offers:
 
  • a polished and consistent look,
  • good day-to-day stain resistance,
  • broad colour and pattern options,
  • and a familiar premium countertop feel.

Quartz stone is often chosen by homeowners who want something that looks clean, contemporary and easy to coordinate with modern cabinetry.

What is sintered stone?

“Sintered stone” is usually used in the market to describe a newer category of highly compacted mineral-based surface material, often associated with high pressure, heat and dense slab formation. In many parts of the market, sintered stone overlaps conceptually with ultracompact surfaces and with some large-format technical porcelain slab conversations, although not every supplier uses the terms in exactly the same way. For homeowners, sintered stone is often marketed around:
 
  • heat resistance,
  • low porosity,
  • a more technical or architectural feel,
  • and a stone-like or porcelain-like large-format aesthetic.

In the Malaysian market, many mainstream sintered stone options are also imported from China, especially outside the top-tier branded segment. That does not define the whole performance story, but it does mean the buyer should pay attention to the actual slab source, specification and finishing quality rather than assuming all sintered stone is equal.

At Carte Kitchen, we do not believe one surface should be pushed into every kitchen.

Through our co-creation and Hybrid Solution approach, we help homeowners understand whether quartz stone or sintered stone is the better fit based on their cooking habits, maintenance expectations, design direction and long-term priorities.